Florida Memory is administered by the Florida Department of State, Division of Library and Information Services, Bureau of Archives and Records Management. The digitized records on Florida Memory come from the collections of the State Archives of Florida and the special collections of the State Library of Florida.
State Archives of Florida
- ArchivesFlorida.com
- State Archives Online Catalog
- ArchivesFlorida.com
- ArchivesFlorida.com
State Library of Florida
Related Sites
Norteno accordion player Tomas Granado, left, and his apprentice Abe Arrazola - Homestead, Florida.
Image Number
Photographer
Date
Collection
Series S 1640 RG 158, Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program Fieldnotes, Papa Joe Arbie, Cajun Accordion Playing (contact sheets): 1991-1992 to Lester Hollenbeck, Wheelwrighting (contact sheets): 1991-1992, Tomas Granado, Norteno Accordion ; Box 13, FF4
Geographic Term
Subject Term
Musical traditions
Music (History and characteristics)
Ethnicity, Mexico
Ethnicity, Latin American and Caribbean
Musical traditions, Mexican
Musical traditions, Norteno
Songs, Mexican
Songs, Ethnic
Arts (Performing)--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Music
Accordion
Button-key accordion
Musical instruments
Accordionists
Instrumentalists
Music--Performance
Male musicians--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Musicians--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Entertainers--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Performing arts--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Mexican Americans--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Apprentices
Mentoring in the arts
Folk musicians--Florida--Dade County--Miami-Dade County--Homestead
Personal Subjects
Corporate Subject
Physical Description
General Note
Norteno music, so named because of its origins in northern Mexico, is played to a polka beat, which traces back to German influences in Monterrey and south Texas. The two common types of songs in the genre are corridos, ballads that often tell of controversy or struggle, and rancheras, roughly the Mexican counterpart to American country music.
Granado got his first accordion when he was eleven and learned to play by watching others and listening to recordings.
Arrazola, of Homestead, excels on the guitar, bass, drums, and bajo sexto, a 12-string guitar with unusually heavy strings. A musician since age five, he will be learning the ornamentation, phrasing, and rhythms of the norteno style and building a repertoire of tunes.
Photographed at Granado's music store, T. G. Music.
Order Prints
Please select the size and options
Order Scan
Please select the size and options
Title
Subject
Creator
Date
Identifier
Image URL
Thumbnail
Geographic Term
Color
Physical Description
Series Title
Shelf Number
General Note
Subject - Person
Subject - Corporate
Collection ID
Chicago Manual of Style
Stone, Robert L., 1944-. Norteno accordion player Tomas Granado, left, and his apprentice Abe Arrazola - Homestead, Florida. 1992. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. <https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/109233>, accessed 28 December 2024.
MLA
Stone, Robert L., 1944-. Norteno accordion player Tomas Granado, left, and his apprentice Abe Arrazola - Homestead, Florida. 1992. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. Accessed 28 Dec. 2024.<https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/109233>
AP Style Photo Citation
(State Archives of Florida/Stone)